About the Author Rodolfo F Acuña was the Founding Chair and a Professor of Chicano Studies at California State University, Northridge. His accolades include.

Similar presentations

Presentation on theme: "About the Author Rodolfo F Acuña was the Founding Chair and a Professor of Chicano Studies at California State University, Northridge. His accolades include."— Presentation transcript:

2 About the AuthorRodolfo F Acuña was the Founding Chair and a Professor of Chicano Studies at California State University, Northridge. His accolades include the California Faculty Associations Academic Freedom Award, the Southern California Social Science Library’s Emil Freed Award, and the Dr. Ernesto Galarza Award for Distinguished Community Activist and Scholarship. Acuña earned his B.A. and Master’s degrees from Los Angeles State College and his Ph.D. in Latin American History from USC in His book, Occupied America, is a classic in Chicano studies. He presented this paper in April 2005 at the Society of Latino Scholars’ Graduate Student Conference on the Michigan State University campus.

3 AbstractRacism resembles bacteria. It has an uncanny ability to resist cures. Like bacteria, racism includes variants with unusual traits which have the ability to withstand an antibiotic attack on a microbe. For the moment the drug or laws kill the defenseless bacteria, “leaving behind — or ‘selecting,’ in biological terms — those that can resist it. These renegade bacteria then multiply, increasing their numbers a million fold in a day , becoming the predominant microorganism.” My point is that we once believed that racism had been defined and that we were on our way to eradicate this ugly social disease only to find it active and well, but in another form

4 Race in AmericaAs a group, Latinos are now 15% of the population and progressives can no longer afford to ignore them or write off the 2004 elections as aberrations.Mexicans, for example, brought A legacy of 300 years of colonialism. Race classification differed from the U.S. where a drop of Indian or African blood made them nonwhite. Passing was much more intense in Mexico than it was in the United States largely because it was possible to move up in racial categories.

6 The Complexity of RaceRacial admixtures in the countries of origin often determine the differences even so far as their taste in music.Mexican culture was formed by a racial order that was based on race, and it persists in the attitudes of Mexican families to this day who still have sayings such as Que bonita pero prietita that qualify beauty according to skin hues. Color is very important and little girls are encouraged to keep out of the sun. This concept of beauty is deeply embedded within many Latinos historical memories.The definition of race is not static and it has a different sense than it had 50 years ago. History suggests that the United States has an uncanny ability to mutate and reinvent categories, and eventually absorb segments of the targeted group.

9 The Illusion of being WhiteIndigenous-looking Mexicans in the United States vehemently insist that they are white when the reality is that they are not.In the 2000 Census almost half of U.S. Latinos (48%) classified themselves as “white only” and 42% of Latinos considered themselves of “some other race.”The illusion of inclusion by white society has encouraged racial stereotypes. For example, in 1986, Japanese Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone remarked that the average American intellectual standard is lower than the average Japanese standard because of the African Americans and Latinos in the U.S. The Japanese Prime Minister said the source of Japan’ strength was its “racial homogeneity.”

10 What is the result? Is Race a Factor?UCLA Survey ResultsThe survey showed 22.7% of freshmen saying that racism was no longer a major problem in the United States. Some 30% had grown up with students of other races and felt comfortable with students of other backgrounds. However ,the survey found a gap between minorities and white freshmen as to whether it was essential or very important to promote racial understanding: 23.5% of whites said yes, it was essential or very important, and 54.8% and 43.6% of Latinos felt that way.26.1% of students said their political views were liberal, compared with 21.9% who self-identified as conservative.

11 Its Location !Of some 20 million Latinos 57% in 2000 lived in neighborhoods where they composed less than half of the population. They lived in census tracts where only 7% of residents were Latinos; 43% resided in neighborhoods where Latinos were the majority. Contrast this with African Americans, 48% of whom lived in census tracts with a majority black population. On average, 71% of the residents in Latino-majority census tracts were Latinos. They composed 7%, on the average, of the neighborhoods where whites were in the majorityThere are differences according to location in the attitudes of Latinos toward discrimination. U.S. Cubans differ from Mexicans as do those recently arrived from Honduras in what they call themselves. For example, Latinos living in predominantly white neighborhoods are more apt to call themselves Hispanic than those living in predominately Latino neighborhoods.

13 ConclusionThe point of the article is, that like bacteria, the definition of race has changed much faster than the academicians have defined it. It is resistant to social antibiotics.Latin American and Mexican history and the literature on race must be incorporated. Race often has different meanings among U.S. Latinos. The different admixtures have produced racially different people. The dynamics of race are still developing between Latinos and the arrival of large numbers of immigrants who compete for space has reinforced nationalism among the groups.The definition of race has been further confused by the arrival of wealthy Latin Americans who have fled the political, social, and an economic leveling in many Latin American countries. Many of these better educated immigrants are a product of their societies where color and family position determine class.

14 ConclusionThis class segmentation by race is unacceptable in a so-called democratic society, especially one as rich as the United States. The denial that Latinos are dropping out of school or are at the bottom of the economic ladder because they are Latinos is denying history.The reality is that most Latino students live in segregated neighborhoods and attend segregation schools that are separate and unequal. They are dropping out at a rate twice as high as white students.

16 “You could also ask who’s in charge“You could also ask who’s in charge. Lots of people think, well, we’re humans; we’re the most intelligent and accomplished species; we’re in charge. Bacteria may have a different outlook: more bacteria live and work in one linear centimeter of your lower colon than all the humans who have ever lived. That’s what’s going on in your digestive tract right now. Are we in charge, or are we simply hosts for bacteria? It all depends on your outlook.”Niel Tyson